One of the major problems with this whole "Get rid of the pink aisle!" thing is that, well... girls like pink. I don't think that it's really a societal stereotype forced on them. It's just a colour girls like, so the toy companies pander to them. If girls were more attracted to lime green, we'd be having the argument that we should 'ban the green aisle!'
Okay, yes, I'm sure that decades (no centuries - Pink before the 1900s was traditionally a 'boy's' colour) of conditioning means that girls have been trained almost genetically to be predisposed to liking pink. But they like it, who cares?
Of course, that's a very shallow reasoning about the colour; Let's get to the meat of the issue. Gender stereotypes aren't bad. Forcing gender stereotypes on people who would rather break the mould is bad. We tell women (and especially little girls) they can be whatever they want to be, and then get ANGRY when what they want to be is something that, without ANY kind of external pressure, is considered "bad" in modern feminism. I'm reminded of that rather funny picture of the man who gave both a dollhouse, and toy cars to his toddler daughter - she put the cars to bed like she would a doll. That's not societal pressure, that's just girls being girls.
It's been proven again and again that girls are gentler and softer, that's just their nature. Toy companies aren't 'forcing their ideals' on girls, they're making toys that reflect what sells best for little girls. The same way they sell grossout toys for boys.
Okay, yes, I'm sure that decades (no centuries - Pink before the 1900s was traditionally a 'boy's' colour) of conditioning means that girls have been trained almost genetically to be predisposed to liking pink. But they like it, who cares?
Of course, that's a very shallow reasoning about the colour; Let's get to the meat of the issue. Gender stereotypes aren't bad. Forcing gender stereotypes on people who would rather break the mould is bad. We tell women (and especially little girls) they can be whatever they want to be, and then get ANGRY when what they want to be is something that, without ANY kind of external pressure, is considered "bad" in modern feminism. I'm reminded of that rather funny picture of the man who gave both a dollhouse, and toy cars to his toddler daughter - she put the cars to bed like she would a doll. That's not societal pressure, that's just girls being girls.
It's been proven again and again that girls are gentler and softer, that's just their nature. Toy companies aren't 'forcing their ideals' on girls, they're making toys that reflect what sells best for little girls. The same way they sell grossout toys for boys.